Sunday April 26, 2026.
A sunny day with occasional clouds 20°C (68°F) with light winds of 6.8 mph (11 km/h).
The weather was promising to make for the perfect for a walk in London, so off we all set.
A taxi to Watford Underground station, where we boarded a busy train to Finchley Road, with many of the passengers disembarking at Wembley Park for the football at Wembley Stadium. The Jubilee line train, which would take us to London Bridge, was just as busy, this time with people holding placards ready to support family and friends running in the London Marathon.
Our walk was to follow the route of London's first passenger dedicated steam railway, The London and Greenwich Railway. The walk would take us from London's oldest train terminus to London's oldest continually used station.
From here it was on to St Thomas Street. Here the paths and roads were fairly clear, so we began our walk eastwards. Keilyn stopped at 'Greggs' to grab herself an ice-cold drink and a pizza slice, before our walk began in earnest.
Here we headed through one of the railway arches, of which there were 878 when the viaduct was constructed, and walked through Malty Street Market. This is a wonderful little market offering food and drinks from around the world, all at reasonable prices. We meandered our way through the growing crowds and found ourselves on Millstream Road, which we followed, back beneath the railway, back onto Druid Street.
We then turned up Abbey Street, where Erin and I went to see some of the marathon runners on Jamaica Road, while Emma and Keilyn sat in the shade. Having seen some of the runners, with a few in costumes, we rejoined Emma and Keilyn and headed along Old Jamaica Road until we reached Marine Street. Going under the railway, again, brought us to Enid Street and onto Spa Road, which took us back beneath the railway to Thurland Road and onto Dockley Road.
Here I could see the arches and the location of the temporary Spa Road station, which opened on February 8, 1836 and closed on December 14, 1836, when the new terminus at Tooley Street, now London Bridge station, opened.
Our first stop was at Deptford Market Yard, where Keilyn purchased some scented marker pens, before we all began looking at the abundance of food outlets, trying to decide on what to eat. Although Emma and I were happy with the selection, Erin and Keilyn were being fussy, so we decided to walk along Deptford High Street in search of somewhere that we would all be satisfied with.
Having explored all we could we rejoined Deptford High Street and made our way back to Deptford station, where Emma and Keilyn were waiting for us. We then made our way up to Platform 1, where we didn't have to wait too long for a train to London Bridge. Erin was still tracking her form tutor, via the app, who was about to complete her second London Marathon. When she crossed the line a massive smile spread across Erin's face as she beamed with pride for her teacher.
Having just missed the Thameslink service, we had to wait for the next train, which happened to be a Southeastern service. Soon we were being whisked back to London Bridge along the same route that we had walked, but taking just a fraction of the time.
Arriving at London Bridge we slowly made our way though the ticket barriers, descending into the depths to the Jubilee line platforms, which were swarming with people. Many of the people awaiting trains were marathon runners, their medals proudly worn, waiting to get home to rest.
Baker Street, by contrast, was much the same as we would expect on a Sunday afternoon. Tamta, who makes the best coffee, was at her Starbucks Kiosk, so we ordered drinks, before Emma headed off to the 'Treats' kiosk to purchase some snacks for the journey home.
Then, as has become usual, we were informed that our train would now be leaving from Platform 4, instead of Platform1. So, up the stairs we clambered, across the ticket hall, down more stairs and boarded the waiting train and took our seats.
The journey was uneventful as we zipped through northwest London, through Metro-land and out into the Hertfordshire countryside. A taxi was ordered and we were soon home, where shoes were taken off, showers had and we all relaxed.
It was a great day out, made more enjoyable because we all went together.
Distance travelled:
- Bus - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Cable Car - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Car - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- DLR - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Ferry - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Overground - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- River Boat - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Taxi - 1.6 miles (2.57 kms)
- Train - 2.8 miles (4.5 kms) (Southeastern)
- Tram - 0.0 miles (0.0 kms)
- Underground - 42 miles (67.59 kms)
- Walking - 6.44 miles (10.36 kms)












What a fab walk. How did Erin's teacher do?
ReplyDeleteAnd Henry VIII had a cooked breakfast, did he .....
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